Amsterdam Wooden Drydock II
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Amsterdam Wooden Drydock II was the second floating
dry dock A dry dock (sometimes drydock or dry-dock) is a narrow basin or vessel that can be flooded to allow a load to be floated in, then drained to allow that load to come to rest on a dry platform. Dry docks are used for the construction, maintenance, ...
of Amsterdam, and was moored in the Westerdok.


Context


A floating Dry dock in the Amsterdam Wet Docks

In November 1842 Amsterdam Wooden Drydock I, the first dry dock of Amsterdam had opened. It was a wooden floating dry dock, and was an immediate success, servicing 64 ships in just under a year. At the time Amsterdam had two large
wet dock The word dock () in American English refers to one or a group of human-made structures that are involved in the handling of boats or ships (usually on or near a shore). In British English, the term is not used the same way as in American Engl ...
s: Westerdok and
Oosterdok The Oosterdok ('Eastern Dock') is a former Dock (maritime), wet dock in Amsterdam. It was created in 1831–1832 by constructing the Oosterdoksdam and the Oosterdoksluis, forming a reliable deep port closed off from the tidal IJ (Amsterdam), IJ. ...
. Drydock I was situated in the more important Oosterdok.


Rederij der Drijvende Droogdokken

The Rederij der Drijvende Droogdokken held a license to the
patent A patent is a type of intellectual property that gives its owner the legal right to exclude others from making, using, or selling an invention for a limited period of time in exchange for publishing an sufficiency of disclosure, enabling discl ...
to operate dry docks in Amsterdam for 5 years, i.e. till December 1846. In order to protect its investments, it would be logical to want to try to prolong this right, and to keep out the competition. Both required the Rederij der Drijvende Droogdokken to realize a second dry dock before the extinction of the patent. Primarily because an attempt to prolong the patent was not likely to be successful if authorities thought that the market was not well serviced. Second, because potential competitors would be attracted by a market that was not well served. Later on, numbers showed that the demand for dry dock capacity was even bigger than that serviced by the first two dry docks. Another reason to build a second dry dock, was that the company also had to service demand in the Westerdok. Of course ships in the Westerdok could be towed to the Oosterdok to use the dry dock(s) there, but such a move cost so much money, that any competitor setting up shop in the Westerdok would have a good proposition.


Design, Construction and Characteristics


Ordering and Construction

By August 1844 it became known that shipping line Rederij der Drijvende Droogdokken had decided to build a second dry dock, and to moor it in the Westerdok. Because the dry dock was wider than the Westerdok lock, it would have been built by a shipyard in the Westerdok.


Characteristics

Amsterdam Wooden Drydock I had been based on an American dry dock that started to operate in New York in 1839-1840. The New York dry dock had been constructed by John S. Gilbert (1801-1891), inventor of the balance dry dock. In turn, Amsterdam Wooden Drydock II was an almost exact copy of Amsterdam Wooden Drydock I. Even the dimensions were about the same. Drydock II was 49.50 m long, 18.70 m wide, and had a depth of hold of 6.50 m. Draft was 1.20 m with 240 last ballast. So, only the length and the draft differed from Drydock I, but the 20 cm more draft, might be explained by the 240 last ballast instead of 160 last (A Dutch
last A last is a mechanical form shaped like a human foot. It is used by shoemakers and cordwainers in the manufacture and repair of shoes. Lasts come in many styles and sizes, depending on the exact job they are designed for. Common variations ...
measured about 2,000 kg). When it was taken into use there was a particular note that Amsterdam Wooden Drydock II was a good 14 m longer than the dry dock in the Oosterdok. This remark about the extra length might have been caused by confusing this dry dock with the Le Havre dock. Van Oordt clearly has the first three dry docks of about even length, and the Le Havre Dock about 15 m longer. An even more likely explanation is that someone made a typo: 14 m longer, instead of the 1.4 m that Van Oordt has. Also note that as long as Willem I Lock was not lengthened, a longer dry dock would only be inefficient.


Service


Opening of the dry dock

On 30 September 1844 Amsterdam Wooden Drydock II was opened by receiving the large three mast ship ''Africa''. ''Africa'' was owned by Boelen en Co. and regularly sailed to West Africa (Guinee). She left the dock again on 1 October. ''Afrika'' was built by shipyard De Haan on Bikkerstraat by shipbuilders J.R. Boelen en Zonen. She was launched on 20 April 1841, and measured 200 lasts. A visit to the Westerdok by the Koninklijk Instituut van Ingenieurs in 1858 showed just how much the dry dock was part of modern technology in 1858. On 14 September the members of the institute visited: The Amsterdam Gas Factory; The Rope Walk of Messrs. Holst and Kooi; Machine factory De Atlas; Amsterdam Wooden Drydock II; and the Amsterdamsche Stoom Suikerraffinaderij.


Drawing of ''Javaan'' in the dry dock

From 1859 there is a drawing of the dry dock by
Johan Conrad Greive Johan Conrad Greive (1837–1891) was a 19th-century Dutch painter. Biography According to the RKD he was the son of a musician and the pupil of his uncle Petrus Franciscus Greive and Cornelis Springer.Egmond aan Zee Egmond aan Zee () is a village on the North Sea coast in the Netherlands, Dutch province of North Holland. It is a part of the municipality of Bergen, North Holland, Bergen, about 9 km west of Alkmaar. Egmond aan Zee was a separate municipali ...
in January 1861, but got free on her own. In March 1861 the frigate ''Javaan'' of 736 ton or 389 last was offered for sale in the Oosterdok. "De Javaan" was a special ship, because it had been built in the Dutch East Indies. As such a note by J. Kooij Jr. about her good qualities made it into a political debate about building navy ships in the Dutch East Indies, instead of sending them from the Netherlands.


Other depictions of the dry dock

''Amsterdam Wooden Drydock II'' is depicted almost in its entirety on a c. 1860 painting of the Westerdok by
Kaspar Karsen Kaspar, or Kasparus Karsen (April 2, 1810 in Amsterdam – July 24, 1896 in Biebrich (Wiesbaden), Biebrich near Wiesbaden, Germany) was a 19th-century painter from the Northern Netherlands who specialised in townscapes. Biography He was a pu ...
. This also depics the Amsterdamsche Stoom Suikerraffinaderij. Another painting of the dry dock is by Jacobus Plaat, which is dated 1859. The Meursing collection had an 1880 photograph of the dry dock.


The End

On 16 June 1890 Westerdok Wooden Drydock was auctioned for breakup, except for the boiler. The condition of removal or breakup might have been caused by overcapacity in the dry docks for smaller ships. Together with two carpenter rafts, a rowboat, and four spars, it fetched 2,549 guilders. The deal obviously failed, because a second a second auction was to take place on 7 July. This was then postponed to 14 July. The break up rendered materials that confirm to the description given by Van Oordt. On 7 August 1890 a large amount of oak,
pine A pine is any conifer tree or shrub in the genus ''Pinus'' () of the family Pinaceae. ''Pinus'' is the sole genus in the subfamily Pinoideae. ''World Flora Online'' accepts 134 species-rank taxa (119 species and 15 nothospecies) of pines as cu ...
and
fir Firs are evergreen coniferous trees belonging to the genus ''Abies'' () in the family Pinaceae. There are approximately 48–65 extant species, found on mountains throughout much of North and Central America, Eurasia, and North Africa. The genu ...
from the dry dock in the Westerdok was offered. On 6 September 1890 an amount of about 200 lasts of stone ballast was offered from the demolition of the dry dock. In November 1890 pines of 18 m length and beams of 20 * 30 cm were offered.


Notes


References

* * * * {{Dry docks in the Netherlands Dry docks in the Netherlands Port of Amsterdam Buildings and structures in Amsterdam